Paul Mayne

Ladybug Videos

It’s interesting to compare this video of Jackson, yesterday playing with a Ladybug with the one from two years ago.

The video was shot on my new Canon HD Vixia HF10 camera, which I’m really enjoying. I also just posted a great video of Jackson and Eli going at it on Wii Boxing.

Playing with Balls

I’ve been messing around with physics engines in AS3 for a while now. My favorites are APE and Box2D, both have their pros and cons. APE is much simpler to use and understand where Box2D is more advanced. Box2D has support for throwing particles and rotations, but it’s all based on metrics, so you have to adjust for pixels.

Here is a little experiment I’ve been playing with and optimizing using APE. Enjoy.

My APE Balls

Flash Source Code This requires the APE engine in your classpath to compile.

Things I Miss About Windows

You have to realize, I was a big fan of the Windows operating system. I was very comfortable on there, happy with the speed and applications available. Before I even switched to mac, I had made a list of apps that I knew were not available on OSX knowing they were apps I would need to find a replacement for, run as an emulation app, or just miss.

I’ve been on my mac for over a month and I still have not installed Parallels (even though I have a license). So there’s nothing that I miss that much, but to follow up my post, Top Things I WILL miss about Windows Vista, here are a few items that would be nice if they were on mac:

  • Snagit - not available for Mac (yet), I’m using Snapz Pro X and it’s decent, but not able to capture scrolling browser content and without the browser chrome.
  • DVDfab Platinum - Awesome DVD ripping. Handbrake is cool, but I like to rip DVD’s uncompressed. There are other options, but nothing like DVDfab.
  • Picasa - I haven’t yet transfered my (pre-switch) photo library over to iPhoto. I like iPhoto, but the features are just different than Picasa. Both apps have pros and cons and I could live with either of them. But it would rock is Google released Picasa for the mac.
  • Google Talk - Adium is awesome for chatting and iChat is fantastic if you are hooking up with a fellow iChat user for voice and video communication. Both support Google accounts via Jabber. But what I miss from the Google Talk application on Windows is the simple ability for voice chat and to drag images into the chat window for sharing at full size. File sharing on Adium is jacked up and there’s no support for voice chat.
  • Flash Develop - A free open source Actionscript editor with excellent code hinting and code completion. I really miss this one. I’ve replaced it with Flex Builder 3, which is an amazing application (until my 60 day trial ends… $300) but it’s built for Flex developers. I’m not a Flex developer but a Flash developer looking for a fantastic code editor. It feels like a huge hack to use Flex builder for Flash development in the Flash CS3 IDE. lots of switching back and fourth and you must create a project for every instance to get the code hinting. Kinda sucks, c’mon Adobe!
    TextMate is an amazing app, but there’s still no robust code hinting or code completion for AS.
  • Sothink SWF Decompiler - The best Actionscript decompiler. Windows only.

That’s it. Nothing major. I’ll never go back. The simplicity of being on this machine and the massive amount of new applications that I’ve discovered have really made my computing experience much more pleasing.

Toronto Bound

On Friday I’m heading up to Toronto for my third visit to FITC, a design and technology conference with presentations from some of the best Flash developers and designers in the business. I’m quite excited to get out of town, spend some time focusing on new concepts, ideas and relaxation with some Actionscript mixed in.

Fortunately this time my sweetie will be accompanying me for the first few days. Unfortunately she’s not a baseball fan and therefore not keen on checking out a Blue Jay’s game.

Speck SeeThru Review

I’ve been using a red Speck SeeThru Hard Shell Case on my 15-inch MacBook Pro for two weeks now. Overall I’m very happy with it, no complaints. It fits perfectly snug and the openings to access the the side ports line up perfect. It’s very light weight and thin enough that I hardly notice it on there.

side view back

I especially like the rubber feet on the bottom as they are larger and more robust than the ones on the MacBook, so they elevate the machine higher to allow better air circulation. I initially had a concern about it retaining heat, but there are special ventilation slits on the bottom to prevent overheating. This also provides a layer of protection for those of you who suffer from MacBook leg burn.

This case provides extra protection from scratches and bumps, which is useful for me as I like to carry my MacBook around while it’s open AND I have two kids. It also provides some additional style. Now available in nine colors, including pink! I went with red to represent my company’s brand.

open

They retail for $49.95, available for 39.03 on Amazon, which you might say is a bit steep for a piece of plastic. But what your paying for is the high level of detail and engineering that has gone into making this fit and work as well as it does.

I really like the look and feel of the MacBook as it is, but the addition of this case what quite seamless and gives me a bit of comfort in the extra protection. I recommend this to anyone looking to add protection and color to you MacBook or MacBook Pro.

Count Dooku

I’m not sure which I’m more excited about, how fun it is to cut up video in iMovie or how sweet it is that Flickr now supports video. Both have just made my day. It took me about five minutes to become completely comfortable with this unique video editing interface. It’s simple, clean and still very powerful. Not built for longer form video, but for short clips and mixes of typical videos, iMovie is fantastic.

My two favorite features are, the rollover previews that include audio, this just makes it fun, and second, Export. Apple has taken the frustration out of exporting video, no longer am I messing with audio and video codec settings just to simply export a clip. Set it and forget it.

Now I present you with this little gem, my Star Wars Kid.

Jana rented Episode 2 for Jackson and told him he could watch it on Friday. As you can see, he was quite excited about seeing Count Dooku.

Vampire Strikes Again

Checked out Vampire Weekend again last night at In The Venue in Salt Lake. They’ve blown up in that short time since I saw them last at Kilby Court four months ago. They mentioned multiple times during the show that playing Kilby Court was probably their favorite venue of the entire tour. Tonight’s show was originally scheduled for Kilby, but quickly moved to a larger venue when they realized how many tickets were being sold.

Vampire Weekend

Since being here in December they’ve released a full length album, been SNL musical guest, Letterman, and cover of Spin magazine among probably many other things. Four months ago there were just over 30 people at the show — tonight, I’d say well over 300 500 people. These four very talented musicians are having fun making new and unique music and their success is well deserved.

If their music alone wasn’t good enough, Vampire Weekend has figured out how to make them look and sound even better… By hooking up with an opening band that sounds like your little sister and her friends singing karaoke at 3 am after drinking two gallons of kool-aid. Yacht has to be one of the strangest opening bands I’ve ever seen or heard (I just listened to their music on myspace and it’s much better recorded than live). It was nothing more than a guy and a girl screaming chants to music played on a laptop (which continued to skip and mess up). Good thing for pool tables…

Vampire only has one album, so a short set is expected, playing only an hour. They claimed a new album is very close, but didn’t reveal any new music from it. Still, a fun show. I realized just how good their drummer is…

I posted a couple vids:

Blake’s Got a New Face
M 79 (compare to last time)

Update: Vampire Weekend: Quality trumps quantity as critical darlings live up to the hype By David Burger - The Salt Lake Tribune

Muxtape

I made a Muxtape (a virtual mix tape) for you. Enjoy.

Muxtape

I’m a fan of the usefulness and simplicity of this web interface from user registration to the presentation page. Beautiful design and fun idea. See 37 Signals comments.

Update: How to Make a Proper Muxtape

Top 10 Things I will NOT miss about Windows Vista

Windows VistaI’ve been using Windows Vista Ultimate for over a year before switching over to Mac and OS X 10.5.2. Here are a few items that I’m really happy to leave behind.

As a side note, the Dell XPS 410 I purchased 1 year ago, fully loaded for near $2500 is now going for less than $450 on eBay. So my first item could be hardware value retention, since Mac hardware retains it’s value very well.

  1. Windows Media Player. I’ve never used a slower, buggier, more bloated piece of junk software in my life.
  2. Random Error messages with no clue how to fix. image acquisition / start up items blocked (if you’re on Vista, you know what I’m talking about).
  3. Buggy and slow iTunes. In OS X scrolling my huge music library is silky smooth.
  4. Buggy Quicktime. I’ve spoken to many people on Windows whom I share the issue of not being able to play the HD trailers on the Apple site.
  5. Spyware, Viruses and Virus scanner. The scanner software is a hassle and a resource hog.
  6. Maxing out at 3GB RAM. Typical Windows machines are 32 bit. I put 4GB ram into my Vista system and it only recognized 3GB. Ripped!
  7. File Browsing is slow, stalls often. Doing normal file browsing often causes a 10-30 second “stall” while the system does who knows what. In fact, I can make Windows Vista crash on demand, it’s not hard to get the “Windows Explorer is not responding” message. I can’t say the same about OS X.
  8. File permissions issues. If folder is set to “Read Only” often times I could not undo this without creating a new folder and copying all the file into that folder (hack!).
  9. All those flashing, pop-up approval screens for EVERY change made to the system. Sure, on Mac you have to enter the admin password for certain system changes. On Vista, times the frequency by at least four and the annoyance by five.
  10. Adobe Premiere. Say Hello to Final Cut.

I will follow up this post with a Top Things I WILL miss about Windows. But I assure you, that list is much shorter.

User Experience Move

For over a year I’ve been working (and playing foosball) at Move Networks as an Art Director in the Marketing department. My primary tasks have been on interface design and prototype development on both client projects and internal applications.

As the company has and continues to grow (over a hundred employees hired since I joined) we have the opportunity to create new departments and groups to better focus our needs and create great work. I now belong to the freshly formed User Experience Group or UXP (wikipedia) as Senior Visual Designer. I’m really looking forward to working with a team of talented people with a similar goal and understanding of interactive user experiences.

We’re currently looking to fill a couple positions within the UXP team at Move Networks. If you gots skills and are interested please take a look at the job postings and let us know.

Current UXP Openings:

Next,

Currently:

via Twitter

Feed Count (Flash)